GMPLS Terms and Acronyms
F
A forwarding path for sending data between GMPLS-enabled devices.
G
An extension to MPLS that allows data from multiple layers to be switched over label-switched paths (LSPs). GMPLS LSP connections are possible between similar Layer 1, Layer 2, and Layer 3 devices.
Layer 3 identifiers, fiber port, time-division multiplexing (TDM) time slot, or dense wavelength-division multiplexing (DWDM) wavelength of a GMPLS-enabled device used as a next-hop identifier.
The four types of GMPLS LSPs are:
- Fiber-switched capable (FSC)—LSPs are switched between two fiber-based devices, such optical cross-connects (OXCs) that operate at the level of individual fibers.
- Lambda-switched capable (LSC)—LSPs are switched between two DWDM devices, such as such as OXCs that operate at the level of individual wavelengths.
- TDM-switched capable (TDM)—LSPs are switched between two TDM devices, such as SONET ADMs.
- Packet-switched capable (PSC)—LSPs are switched between two packet-based devices, such as routers or ATM switches.
L
A protocol used to define a forwarding adjacency between peers and to maintain and allocate resources on the traffic engineering links.
T
A logical connection between GMPLS-enabled devices. Traffic engineering links can have addresses or IDs and are associated with certain resources or interfaces. They also have certain attributes (encoding-type, switching capability, bandwidth, and so on). The logical addresses can be routable, although this is not required because they are acting as link identifiers. Each traffic engineering link represents a forwarding adjacency between a pair of devices.